To work this out, I used the factorial button on my calculator and
rounded the answer to 3 significant figures. You could also use
Stirling's approximation (see the Notes).

The exact figure would certainly have a number of noughts at the
end but certainly not 67 of them. You might like to work out just
how many zeros there actually are at the end of the number
52!

But just how big is this number?

I wanted to get an idea of what this might be like and decided
that a good way to do that might be to consider how long it would
take to recreate every possible shuffle. I had this feeling that I
might need some help so thought about how many people I might need
to help me get it done in a reasonable time span.

To make things easy, let us assume that a person would be able
to recreate one new shuffle every second.

There are 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour and 24
hours in a day. So...

In one day one person could generate:

$60 \times 60 \times24 = 86400 = 8.64 \times10^4 $
shuffles.

There are 365 days in a year, so if I worked non stop I could
manage:

$365 \times86400 = 31536000 = 3.15 \times10 ^7$ shuffles in
one year.

Still feels like a long way to go! I need a lot more time so
let's think about the age of the universe, that might help if I
could live that long!

The universe is estimated to be between $12$ and $20$ billion
years old. Let's take its age, for the sake of this calculation, to
be $15$ billion years old. That is $1.5 \times 10^{10} $
years.

This means that, if I started doing the shuffles when the
universe began, I would still be doing them now and I would have
done:

There are approximately $100,000,000,000= 1.00 \times 10^{11}$
galaxies in the universe.

So there are approximately $1.00 \times10^{22}$ stars in our
universe.

This is looking promising! But I think we still have some way to
go.

Let's assume that around each star there circles one earth-like
planet (that is a planet with alien life on it). This would mean
that the number of Earths in the universe is $10^{22}$.

There are approximately $7$ billion people living on the Earth
($7.00 \times10^9$).

So there could be $7.00 \times10^9 \times1.00 \times10^{22} = 7.00
\times10^{31}$ aliens living in the universe.

So, I could utilise the population of the universe to help
me!

Let's imagine that all these aliens have been living since the
big bang and have been shuffling away. All they have been doing
since the beginning of time is shuffling their pack of cards - one
permutation per second.

The number of permutations tried by these aliens is
therefore:

$7.00 \times10^{31} \times4.73 \times10^17 =3.31
\times10^{49}$

Which is only a fraction of all the possible permutations of a
single pack of cards.

This is possibly why we have not been contacted by aliens yet
- they are all too busy shuffling packs of cards!